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With two days left, here’s POLITICO’s Senate 5:

1. REHBERG UP FOUR, OR TESTER UP TWO? — Sunday was a veritable war of the polls in Big Sky Country as Rep. Denny Rehberg’s campaign touted the latest Mason-Dixon poll conducted for Montana newspapers, which showed him four points ahead of Sen. Jon Tester. But the Democrat’s campaign pushed back on Mason-Dixon’s results even before they were published, and fresh numbers from Public Policy Polling support Team Tester’s contention that it has a narrow edge. The Democratic polling firm has Tester leading Rehberg, 48 percent to 46 percent, which Tester’s campaign says is more in line with other recent surveys in what has been a stubbornly close Senate race. The wildcard – and the concern for Republicans — has been Libertarian Dan Cox, but the Mason-Dixon poll shows he wins a mere 1 percent of the vote. “In a high-profile race like this, I don’t think people are inclined to waste their votes,” said Brad Coker, Mason-Dixon’s managing director. But Tester’s campaign disputes that, too, saying the state’s libertarian bent should help Cox do better than that. The PPP numbers show Cox getting 4 percent.

2. PPP: MCCASKILL MAINTAINS LEAD— While Mitt Romney is expected to win Missouri with ease, new numbers from Public Policy Polling show Sen. Claire McCaskill holding on to a 4-point lead, 48-44 percent. Rep. Todd Akin gained four points, thanks to a small increase in support among Republicans. One key takeaway from the PPP poll is that McCaskill has the support of 91 percent of Democrats while Akin has the support of 79 percent of Republicans. Libertarian Jonathan Dine has 6 percent of the vote and as PPP notes, if “they stay with Dine, McCaskill wins. If they decide the desire for a Republican Senate outweighs their disgust for Akin, then Akin has a chance.” As Akin and McCaskill made their final push with voters, Akin told supporters he’s “cautiously optimistic” he would win. “People are going to be real surprised with the result of this election,” Akin said, according to the Associated Press.

3. IN CONNECTICUT, A FINAL PUSH FOR WOMEN’S VOTES — Murphy and Republican Linda McMahon spent the final weekend working to wrap up the women’s vote,which McMahon lost by 12 points in 2010. Murphy rallied with activist Sandra Fluke in Middletown. “I’ve seen some of the crap that Linda McMahon is pulling,” Fluke said, according to the Hartford Courant. “You’ve seen her going around Connecticut saying ‘I’m pro-choice.’ Ms. McMahon, you are not pro-choice if you stand for the Blunt amendment.”